Stranger than Strange provides activity ideas for a wide range of settings, from classrooms to long-term
care facilities. The activities are based on dedicated researchers' experience and observations. The topics
are Stranger than Strange.

Robert Morgan teaches you how to have a personal encounter with a Forest Giant
(Bigfoot). There are clear instructions for finding the best place to search for the
Forest Giants, what you need to do to prepare yourself, and how to react when you have
your encounter. Robert also shares some of his successes and failures... and a bit of
personal philosophy, too.

From 1972 to 1990 Robert W. Morgan journeyed across America
and to Russia to meet with Native Americans, a Tibetan lama, Bigfoot researchers, and
legends of the Old West. In this book he reports on the relationship between Native
American legends, Tibetan beliefs, the modern phenomenon of Bigfoot and UFO sightings, and
why the legends are important in understanding modern American culture

A four-year story of ongoing encounters between
the author, Sali Sheppard-Wolford and a group of Bigfoot that played in her yard and
thunderously walked by her house in the dead of night.

In addition to the Bigfoot encounters, Sheppard-Wolford describes her spirit journeys
with the Indian guide, Dream Walker, and investigations of other strange phenomena near
Orting, including an old UFO crash where the old newspapers reporting the crash have
mysteriously disappeared and spirit lights that appeared on the ridge above the river.

The classic Bigfoot book of the 1980s updated with more stories and
pictures of Bigfoot sightings and Bigfoot hunters. The Bords take a Fortean view of the
topic by presenting the evidence and letting you draw your own conclusions. There's more
about Bigfoot and other Bigfoot sites here.

A brilliant look at the phenomena the mystify us, bringing together
diverse areas such as fairies and UFOs, crop circles and skeptics, devils, angels,
shamans, and witches. This is a wonderful book for those of you who are looking for more
than another list of haunted houses or mundane ghostly tales.

Harpur says that we do not live in a purely physical reality, as many
Western scientist would have us believe. Instead there is another side to our lives that
Harpur calls daimonic reality. It makes room for many of the things that we know exist,
but choose to ignore because we have been told they are "impossible." Putting
the two realities together will make our world whole again and let us move on toward
deeper understanding of the events Harpur calls daimonic.

Harpur weaves his thesis with wit and ingenuity, combining ideas of Carl
Jung, the Gnostics, the Romantic poets and writers with his own insights to show us what
is possible if we allow ourselves to experience our world daimonically.